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Tag Archives: michigan

Classy, home state

06 Monday Apr 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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gender and sexuality, michigan, politics

My old health insurance, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, has stopped providing coverage for sexual reassignment surgery for trans folks. This move was (sadly) part of larger cutbacks in coverage, due to a $133 million dollar loss in the past year. However, according to the Gale Encyclopedia of Surgery only 100 to 500 sexual reassignment surgeries are performed annually in the United States. Even with costs ranging from seven to fifty thousand dollars (depending on what medical procedures are done), I doubt this was a huge line-item in the BCBSM budget. Considering that the vast majority of health insurance companies already deny coverage to trans folks, it’s disappointing to see one more bite the dust. Not cool Michigan.

Moviesnotes: Coraline

13 Friday Feb 2009

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in media

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books, michigan, movies

These “movienotes” posts seem to take me about a week to actually get around to finishing. Last Sunday, we went to see the new Henry Selick feature, Coraline, which is a stop-motion animated film based on the novella by Neil Gaiman. Despite being an animated movie based on a book marketed to middle-grade readers, like other Selick films (eg Nightmare Before Christmas and Corpse Bride) Coraline is not a film for younger children (unless you know said children very well and have pre-screened the film yourself with them in mind). It is about a child who, moving into a new house, stumbles into an alternate version of reality controlled by an evil spirit, the Belle Dame, who devours children and kidnaps her parents, all the while insisting she is Coraline’s “other mother,” her better mother, and becomes very, very nasty when canny little Coraline resists her attempts at seduction.

The book is a deeply scary, compelling read; and with that version of the tale in the back of my mind, I’m sorry to say I wasn’t that caught up by the narrative of the film. They shifted locations from London to southern Oregon, and added characters that leeched away the ingenuity of Coraline-the-book-character. I was also disappointed by the film version of the cat, whom I remember playing a more central role in the novel (although to be fair, it’s been a few years). The women at Pursuit of Harpyness have a round-table discussion going about the film that likewise raises some questions about how the story adaptions changed the nature of the story and, in some ways, made the central narrative of a girl who successfully combats an ancient evil confused and unsatisfying.

Yet all is not lost!! Taken on its own terms — particularly as a visual accomplishment — the film was totally worth seeing. Whether you end up seeing it in 3D or regular format, it’s overflowing with color and spectacle, and manages to walk a line between whimsical and eerily wrong quite adeptly. It was the small details in the film that, for me, made it worth watching. The switch from England to America was jarring, but I was won over by the fact that Coraline’s family (in the film) moves to southern Oregon, to the outskirts of a town boasting a Shakespeare festival — the town is unnamed, but is obviously an allusion to Ashland, near where I went to school for part of my extended undergraduate career. Not only did they move to a place I know and love, but they also moved from a place I know and love: Michigan! Coraline and her parents relocate from Pontiac, Michigan, and her father sports a Michigan State sweatshirt for most of the film. This is apparently a wink to one of the producers, who graduated from the school, and it led to an entertaining game of spot-the-Michigan-references. I was also charmed by the song written and performed by They Might be Giants, even though it was part of the “other mother”‘s not-quite-right world.

Oh, and I totally want Coraline’s yellow slicker and galoshes for Boston’s rainy season.

Image nicked from Grow Wings.

For Hanna’s take, see “coraline”

Best News of the Week

03 Friday Oct 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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Tags

election08, michigan, politics


I talked to my parents last night back in Michigan — which has been a tight swing state in recent election cycles — and they reported that the McCain campaign is so far behind that they’re pulling out and leaving the state to Obama & co.! Aside from hearing that Brian and Renee have adopted a puppy, I think this might be the best news to come by way this week. Go Michiganders!

*image borrowed from handmade detroit via the sweetie pie press.

Why Didn’t I Move to Washington?

17 Thursday Jan 2008

Posted by Anna Clutterbuck-Cook in think pieces

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feminism, michigan, politics

Just in time for the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, NARAL Pro-Choice America has released their report Who Decides? that details the state of reproductive rights nationwide. They assign each state a letter grade based on the legal, political, and social factors (such as health coverage for birth control, access to women’s health services, and abortion laws). Not that I find it particularly surprising, but here’s the performance of a few states I take a personal interest in:

  • Michigan . . . . . . . F
  • Massachusetts . . B-
  • Oregon . . . . . . . . A
  • Washington . . . . A+
Yep. There’s a reason why I felt like I was living in hostile territory when I was in West Michigan (and my heart goes out to all of you who are still fighting the good fight). Not that I’ll rule out moving back there someday, but sometimes it’s nice to imagine what it would be like to live in one of those states that got an A. Like when I’m starting a family, or, I don’t know, maybe just being a woman.

And while we’re on the subject of maps and rankings, Mapping Our Rights: Nagivating Discrimination against Women, Men, and Families is another interactive report on human rights in the United States. It was put together by Ipas, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, and SisterSong and includes a greater diversity of important factors, such as the right to gay marriage and the legal status of midwifery. The results are thus more complicated, but tell a roughly comparable story. Ranked from 1 (most favorable) to 50 (most hostile) we have:

  • Michigan . . . . . . . 43
  • Massachusetts . . 11
  • Oregon . . . . . . . . 10
  • Washington . . . . . 2
I don’t know what they’re drinking up there in Washington state, but whatever it is, I wish they’d share it with the rest of the nation. I’d say they were just living too close to Canada, but then again so are the Michiganders and that doesn’t seem to have helped.

I think these three happy uteri live in Washington . . .

. . . and thanks to Radical Doula for the head’s up on the NARAL report.

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